The Cincinnati Art Museum features two wonderful groundbreaking exhibitions. “Working Together: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop” revisits the shared work and philosophy of the 14 original members, whose exhibitions and publication platforms preserved their legacy and opened avenues for subsequent generations of Black Artists today. Cynthia Kukla covers “David Driskell: Icons of Nature and […]
Archive for March, 2022
Working Together: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop
March 26th, 2022 | by Marlene Steele | published in *, March 2022
The Cincinnati Art Museum is featuring a traveling exhibition of the work of a Black photography collective formed in New York City in the early 60’s. The Kamoinge Workshop emerged in1963 when a Harlem-based group of black photographers came together to share friendship and technical knowledge and, most importantly, a mutual philosophy that photography could […]
Icons of Nature and History, a legacy exhibition of David Driskell, Cincinnati Art Museum, Feb. 25–May 15, 2022.
March 26th, 2022 | by Cynthia Kukla | published in *, March 2022
David Driskell, an acclaimed African American artist and educator, was born in 1931 in Georgia during the beginning of the Depression – the worldwide economic downturn that began in 1929 and lasted ten years. It was the longest and most severe economic depression the world ever experienced. Imagine how this awful event influenced Driskell’s life […]
The Transforming Touch: “MARK: About the Artist’s Hand” at Manifest Gallery, March 4-April 1, 2022
March 26th, 2022 | by Jonathan Kamholtz | published in *, March 2022
Manifest Gallery is not shy about being ambitious in its prompts for exhibitions, and few shows that I have seen there are more ambitious than “MARK: About the Artist’s Hand.” The mark is very close to the molecule of art. Many of the questions and ideas raised by this show could readily be applied to […]
A Thought Is a River at the Carnegie
March 26th, 2022 | by Clair Morey | published in *, March 2022
The group exhibition, A Thought Is a River at the Carnegie (Covington, KY) gathers and places both sculpture and painting in collective relationships to one another. Some works appear to be excavated from deep within the earth, while others are industrial and integrate artificial structuring. Collectively, the work undulates the passage of time; their materials […]
Against the Received View of Art History: Curatorship as Genealogical Meaning-Making
March 26th, 2022 | by Ekin Erkan | published in *, March 2022
Shin Gallery’s newest exhibition, Amalgamation: Celebrating 10 Years of Shin Gallery, on view until April 23, 2022, is perhaps one of the most unique gallery shows I have seen. This is due to both the exhibition’s a-chronological curatorship and the opportunity to view old masters and so-called “blue chip” art historical bastions alongside “outsider artists,” […]
Kennedy Heights Arts Center: New Exhibits and New Programs
March 26th, 2022 | by Laura Hobson | published in March 2022
Kennedy Heights Arts Center offers new exhibits and programs continuing its outreach and diversity mission, according to Executive Director Ellen Muse-Lindeman. For example, Juneteenth Cincinnati Presents Voices of Freedom from February 26 to April 16 at the Lindner Annex, 6620 Montgomery Road. It is an exhibition of commissioned new works by ten artists, eight of […]